Last week we touched on how demanding the transition can be for former Lites champions into the premiere class. Past Lites/125 SX champions such as Ivan Tedesco, Travis Pastrana, Tim Ferry, Grant Langston, along with a host of others—for a variety of reasons—never found the success on big bikes indoors that they enjoyed during their Lites careers. With Eli Tomac, Ken Roczen and Wil Hahn—all former Lites (250SX) champions—set to embark on their first full 450 seasons come January, we’ve decided to take a look back and see how past Lites champions performed in their first season on big bikes. The comprehensive list dates back ten years—when 2002 125 East Champion Chad Reed made his debut—and covers the year each rider made his full-time 450/250 debut, their finishing position in the final point standings, number of wins, number of podiums, best finish, and how many starts they made.

Rider

First Season

Rank in Final Points

Wins

Podiums

Best Finish

Starts

Chad Reed

2003

2nd

8

14

1st

16 of 16

Travis Preston

2005

9th

0

0

6th

12 of 16

James Stewart

2005

10th

3

4

1st

6 of 16

Ivan Tedesco

2006

4th

0

2

2nd

16 of 16

Grant Langston

2007

18th

0

0

4th

7 of 16

Davi Millsaps

2007

15th

0

1

2nd

9 of 16

Ryan Villopoto

2009

6th

2

5

1st

13 of 17

Ryan Dungey

2010

1st

6

11

1st

17 of 17

Jason Lawrence

2010

19th

0

0

8th

8 of 17

Trey Canard

2011

5th

3

5

1st

14 of 17

Jake Weimer

2011

26th

0

0

6th

2 of 17

Broc Tickle

2012

9th

0

0

6th

16 of 17

Justin Barcia

2013

4th

2

5

1st

17 of 17

Ryan Dungey is the only rider in the last decade to win a title his rookie season.Andrew Fredrickson photo

Notes:

Jake Weimer broke his forearm testing prior to his 450SX debut in 2011 and was only able to compete in two of seventeen rounds.

James Stewart broke his arm in practice at round two of the 2005 season, then returned at the midway point.

Davi Millsaps broke his femur in pre-season testing for 2007. He returned about halfway through the season.

The same year, Grant Langston broke his collarbone and missed most of his first 450 season. He would return to win the AMA Motocross Championship that summer.

Once again, J-Law makes it into one of these articles. We just can't help ourselves!

You won’t find 2003 East Region Champion Branden Jesseman, or 2007 East Region Champion Ben Townley or 2009 and 2010 East Region Champion Christophe Pourcel on this list. Why? Well, because all three never competed in a full-time 450 season.

Pourcel was unable to come to an agreement with a 450 team in supercross for 2011, but he did sign with MotoConcepts for the Nationals. That didn’t exactly work out, either, so Pourcel headed back to Europe to race the GPs. Pourcel only lasted a year before a big injury at Bercy cost him the 2013 season. The book is not yet closed on his career, though, as a comeback to the 250 Class in Lucas Oil Pro Motocross is rumored. 450 supercross? May never happen.

Injuries cost Townley a chance at the big bike class—although he did compete outdoors with Lucas Oil/Troy Lee Designs in 2010 before injuries, a return trip to the GPs and Australia, and another big injury (just before a return to the U.S. in the Nationals with TwoTwo Motorsports) cost him his career. Townley has since retired.

Branden Jesseman hung around the Lites class for a number of years after winning his championship, but injuries derailed his chances at the premiere class. In fact, injuries derailed him in the small bores, too, as he was never healthy enough to defend his title, and went through several more injury riddled seasons before notching a lone additional Lites win in 2007 in Orlando. He never had a full season on a 450.

Justin Barcia's rookie season ranks right alongside some of the greats.Simon Cudby photo